victoria
Could you tell me the difference between "Tom will be washing clothes" and " Tom will wash clothes"?
23. Aug. 2013 23:22
Antworten · 4
1
You can use "Tom will be washing clothes" in two possible contexts: 1) By itself, it means an arrangement that Tom has made, as far as you know (you might have to ask Tom again later). 2) When paired with another future action, it means Tom's action will already be in progress when the other action happens.
24. August 2013
I learned a rules that means: When somebody is doing something right now you may use to be verb + verb (action)+ing When somebody will do something after some minutes, you can use just will verb + verb (action) in infitive form. But I'm sure both are right
23. August 2013
Tom is washing the clothes. (continuous) Tom will wash the clothes. (future)
23. August 2013
Wshing is a noun. Wash is a verb. Both sentences mean the same. To use the noun form, washing... the verb needed is "be".
23. August 2013
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